Thursday, January 12, 2012

Now is the time to make an official announcement: I am no longer teaching Java to Master's students in Tallinn Technical University (TTÜ).

I have really enjoyed doing it during the past 6 years, and I definitely learned a lot during this time.
Teaching in a university is not something you would do for money and it also eats up a lot of your spare time - I did it because I know I am good at it and I wanted to share my knowledge and experience in the field, especially considering the fact that most university professors/lecturers have little understanding of how software development really works and how to teach it. I did it for those students each year who really had their eyes shining. Because of them, it was worth it.

However, Java is no longer the coolest programming language out there, it slowly dies due to lack of or very slow development. Its features are outdated, it is not as productive as I would like it to be. It's time to move on. Probably Java still is one of the best programming languages to teach in the universities, but students should understand that world software development field is evolving quickly and they need to keep an eye of what is happening in the industry.

I am still a big fan of JVM - it is well tuned for performance and it is cross-platform. .NET/C# is not nearly an option. I really like Scala, Clojure seems very interesting, as well as Vala, Go and Dart. Kotlin seems very promising as well. Sooner or later there will be another popular language on JVM that most Java developers will be able to shift to. Hopefully there won't be too many of such languages and hopefully they will be statically typed. I recommend every Java developer to check the Play framework for a fresh look at Java. Anyway, the current trend in software development is to merge academic computer science and industrial programming together again - you should pay a lot more attention to functional programming in addition to the good old object oriented programming (OOP) now. The concept of DevOps is also becoming more and more important, meaning that soon you will not be able to survive as a developer, if you don't know how to create a software product from scratch until the end, deploying it yourself to the production system.

However, I am not going to leave the teaching 'business'. I will still give talks at conferences, organize trainings, and hopefully contribute to making IT education better with Codeborne Academia, but more on that later. I am still open to offers from universities and colleges as well, feel free to contact me.